|
My first Alexander Technique* teacher taught group
classes in his studio. Once in awhile, he would venture out into
the anteroom where students left their coats and shoes and would
return holding aloft a pair of high-heeled shoes, demanding in a
booming voice: Who belongs to THESE! There would follow
a moment of embraced silence until some poor woman would meekly
confess.
In retrospect, I dont think this was a particularly good
strategy. Public humiliation is unlikely to enhance any learning
process, certainly not one so subtle as learning the Alexander Technique.
And in my years of experience since then, Alexander teachers usually
go out of their way to provide a friendly, supportive atmosphere
for their students.
But like many Alexander Technique teachers, I do try my best to
coax wearers of high-heeled shoes to lessen their dependence on
them and, if at all possible, to gradually give them up entirely.
Fortunately our notions of acceptable work wear have changed and
its a lot easier to do this today than twenty-five years ago
when I was having my first lessons.
Why are Alexander teachers so concerned about this issue?
There are two main reasons: First, high-heeled shoes throw the
entire weight of the wearer forward, making it far more difficult
to sustain upright balance. They force the women wearing them to
use a lot of extra muscular effort to keep themselves from falling
forward. Much of this extra effort is concentrated in the lower
back, producing an exaggerated arch which can easily lead to back
pain.
But the distorting effects go far beyond the lower back. Human
bodies function as a whole and so its not possible to create
undue tension in one region without also producing a series of related
restrictions extending from the head down to the feet.
Shallow breathing, tight necks and shoulders, knee and ankle pain
- these are just a few of the possible consequences of giving up
the easy and natural upright balance designed into our structure
and replacing it with a system of muscular tugs and pulls that attempt
to keep us from falling over.
A second important reason for our concern about wearing high heels
is that they make it very difficult for the feet to carry out their
important sensing and balancing roles. The underlying structure
of the human foot is very similar to that of the hand - lots of
bones and joints designed to allow us to quickly and easily sense
and adapt to whatever it contacts.
When we squeeze our feet into tight fitting shoes and then remove
almost all contact with the surface on which were standing
or walking, we allow these sensing and adapting functions to atrophy.
Its no wonder that many women look like theyre about
to tumble down when they walk about in these shoes. They are!
Its interesting - and telling - that at times when stiletto
heels have been in vogue, the main concern was the harm these heals
did to floor surfaces - not to the women wearing them!
I remember reading about an elementary school teacher on Long Island
who was ordered by the school board to refrain from wearing these
shoes in her classroom because of the pock marks they were leaving
in the wooden floors - not because she was increasing her risk of
injury. And not because of the terrible visual example her stiff
posture was setting for her students.
Does all this mean that one should never, ever wear high-heeled
shoes? No, it certainly wont harm you to wear them once in
a while, particularly if you take advantage of these occasions to
sense their effect on your posture and movement patterns.
In fact, it can be quite illuminating during an Alexander Technique
lesson for a student to switch back and forth between high heels
and flat shoes (or going barefoot) for this very purpose, and to
learn how to make the best of high heels when it is absolutely necessary
to wear them.
If you are a frequent wearer of these shoes, and want to lessen
your use of them, its probably best not to do so at once.
I would recommend gradually reducing the heel height and the amount
of time you wear them in order to give your body time to adjust.
Shoe styles come and go. Platform shoes, high heeled boots for
men, negative heel shoes - theres really no end
to the silly designs that have appeared over the years. The best
general shoe advice Ive seen comes from Elizabeth Langford,
an experienced British teacher of the Alexander Technique who sums
up the whole question very well in her wonderful book, Mind and
Muscle - An Owners Handbook:
I think you should start from a recognition that nature
knows best. Granted that we like to have some protection,
in a good shoe we can still approximate to the bare-feet state.
That is, we can feel, we can move, we can balance, we are not compelled
to make unnecessary movement. The good shoe is flexible, stays on
the foot and is not thicker or heavier than circumstances demand.
*The Alexander Technique is a century-old method of learning how
to release harmful tension from your body.
***
Mind and Muscle, and a great many other useful books about the
Alexander Technique can be ordered from The Alexander Technique
Bookstore at http://www.alexandertechnique.com/books
Robert Rickover is a teacher of the Alexander Technique living
in Lincoln, Nebraska. He also teaches regularly in Toronto, Canada.
Robert is the author of Fitness Without Stress - A Guide to the
Alexander Technique and is the creator of The Complete Guide to
the Alexander Technique (http://www.alexandertechnique.com)
|